Mythology.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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Across cultures, mythologies tend to describe similar characters.
A common character is the trickster.
The trickster is recklessly bold and even immoral, but through hisinventiveness he often helps human beings.
In Greek mythology, Hermes (best known as the messenger of the gods) was a famous trickster.
In one version of acharacteristic tale, Hermes, while still an infant, stole the cattle of his half-brother Apollo.
To avoid leaving a trail that could be followed, Hermes made shoes from thebark of a tree and used grass to tie them to the cattle’s hooves.
When Apollo nonetheless discovered that Hermes had stolen his cattle, he was furious.
In the end,Apollo was so enchanted with the music of a lyre that Hermes had made that he allowed Hermes to keep the cattle in exchange for the lyre.
Other tricksters ofmythology are the West African god Eshu, who tricked the supreme god Olodumare into abandoning the earth to dwell in heaven; the Indian god Krishna, whosetrickery often aims at a higher moral purpose; and the Native American Coyote, who scattered the once-orderly stars in the sky and strewed the plants on earth.
Myths about the gods are as numerous as the cultures that produce them.
Other types that occur across various cultures include myths about the Great Mother (forexample, the Mesopotamian Ishtar, who journeys to the underworld to rescue her lost lover Tammuz); the Dying God (for example, the Egyptian Osiris, who ismurdered and dismembered but ultimately resurrected); and the Savior God (for example, the Greek Prometheus, who helps humanity at the cost of incurring Zeus’sanger).
C Myths of Heroes
Nearly all cultures have produced myths about heroes.
Some heroes, such as the Greek Achilles, have one mortal and one divine parent.
Others are fully human but areblessed with godlike strength or beauty.
Many myths about heroes concern significant phases of the hero’s career, such as the circumstances of the hero’s birth, ajourney or quest, and the return home.
The birth and infancy of a mythological hero is often exceptional or even miraculous.
In the ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean world, the births of many heroesfollowed similar patterns.
For example, the Hebrew prophet Moses, the Greek hero Oedipus, and the Roman heroes Romulus and Remus were all exposed to theelements at birth and left to die, but miraculously survived.
Other heroes were immediately able to care for themselves.
In early infancy, the Greek hero Herculesstrangled a pair of enormous serpents sent to kill him.
The Irish Cú Chulainn, who later became a great warrior, also performed astonishing feats of strength as a child.
Most heroes set off on a quest or a journey of some kind.
One of the earliest tales of a hero’s journey is the Babylonian story known as the Gilgamesh epic, written incuneiform on 12 clay tablets in about 2000 BC.
The hero, Gilgamesh, embarks on a quest for immortality.
A goddess named Siduri guides him, and in the course of his adventures he must do combat with monsters and visit the world of the dead.
At the end of the quest, Gilgamesh must accept mortality, which the gods allotted tohuman beings when they created them.
In Greek and Roman mythology the stories of Jason (who sailed in quest of the Golden Fleece) and of Aeneas (who traveledfrom Troy to Italy to found Rome) likewise describe journeys or quests.
Other narratives that may be interpreted as heroic journeys include the biblical story of theHebrew prophet Moses, who led his people on a 40-year journey through the wilderness, and the Celtic tale of King Arthur and the quest for the Holy Grail ( see Arthurian Legend).
The most famous tale of a hero’s return home is probably the ancient Greek story of Odysseus, recounted in the Odyssey by the poet Homer.
When the story opens, Odysseus has been away for nearly 20 years, fighting in the Trojan War and then kept captive by the sea nymph Calypso.
Back in his kingdom of Ithaca, suitors whowant to marry his wife Penelope are devouring and wasting his property and plotting against his son.
Zeus persuades Calypso to let Odysseus leave and return home,but the god Poseidon is angry with Odysseus and is determined to kill him.
In the course of his journey, Odysseus is shipwrecked, held captive by Calypso, and nearlydevoured by monsters; all his companions are killed.
When he finally returns to Ithaca, penniless and without allies, he must plot the destruction of the suitors andpersuade Penelope that he really is who he claims to be.
Of course, he succeeds brilliantly.
IV INTERPRETING MYTHS
The universal human practice of myth-making appears to be the earliest means by which people interpreted the natural world and the society in which they lived.
Thusmyth has been the dominant mode of human reflection for the greater part of human history.
Greek thinkers of the 6th century BC were the first people known to question the validity of myth-making.
In subsequent centuries the rationalism introduced by these Greeks and the monotheism (belief in one God) of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all but replaced myth-making throughout much of the world.
In some Asian and African cultures, however, traditional stories retained their powerand became important elements of religious systems.
And some cultures in the modern world maintain a worldview based primarily on myths.
These cultures includeNative Americans, Aboriginal Australians, and the Maori of New Zealand.
A Antiquity
In the early stages of Greek civilization, as in other ancient cultures, the truth of myths was taken for granted.
The Greek word mythos, from which the English word myth is derived, was originally used to describe any narrative.
Early Greek authors who employed the term drew no rigid distinction between tales that were historical or factual and those that were not.
In the 6th century BC, however, Greek thinkers began to question the validity of their culture’s traditional tales, and the word mythos came to denote an implausible story.
Greek philosopher Xenophanes, for example, argued that much of the behavior that the poets Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods was unworthy of divinebeings.
By the 5th century BC, serious Greek thinkers tended to regard the old myths as naive explanations for natural phenomena or simply to reject them altogether. Nevertheless, myths retained their cultural importance, even after they had come under attack from philosophers.
The ancient Greek tragedies, which remained centralto civic and religious life in Athens through the end of the 5th century BC, drew their subject matter largely from myths.
In the early 4th century BC, Greek philosopher Plato systematically contrasted logos, or rational argument, with mythos—which in Plato’s view was little better than outright falsehood.
In his philosophical dialogue The Republic, Plato argued that the ideal commonwealth should exclude traditional mythological poetry on the grounds that it was full of dangerous falsehoods.
Plato himself nevertheless devised myths of a sort to explore such topics as the birth of the world and death and the afterlife,which in his view fell outside the boundaries of logical explanation.
After Plato, most thinkers either tried to apply reason to the supernatural elements in myths or interpreted them symbolically.
Euhemerus, a Greek writer of the 4thcentury BC, traced the origin of the gods to the deification of human rulers by their grateful subjects.
This explanation for the gods is consequently known as euhemerism.
Philosophers known as the Stoics and—much later—the Neoplatonists interpreted myths as allegories (narratives that employ picturesque language and images to convey a hidden message).
Even as classical Greco-Roman civilization went into decline in the early centuries AD, the older, more critical spirit of Xenophanes was kept alive by Greek essayist and satirist Lucian of Samosata.
In the 2nd century Lucian lampooned such myths as the birth of Athena from Zeus’s head, as well asthe Judgment of Paris, which supposedly led to the Trojan War.
B Hebrew and Early Christian Interpretations
In the Hebrew tradition, the break from mythology took a different direction than it had taken among the Greeks.
Here, the source of tension was not theincompatibility of myth and reason—as it had been with the Greeks—but the incompatibility of Near Eastern polytheism (belief in many gods) and Hebrew monotheism..
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